The pretesting effect comes to full fruition after longer delays and in the presence of interference
Tue-HS2-Talk V-01
Presented by: Oliver Kliegl
The pretesting effect refers to the finding that taking a pretest before some target material is studied can enhance recall of that material on a subsequent final test even if participants fail to recall the correct information during pretesting. In the present research, we examined whether the magnitude of the pretesting effect is modulated when either the retention interval prior to the final test is prolonged (Experiment 1) or additional, interfering study material is encountered between study and final testing of the target material (Experiment 2). Employing both weak associates (Experiment 1a) and a prose passage (Experiment 1b) as study material, the present study found that the size of the pretesting effect can increase with retention interval. Furthermore, employing weak associates as study material, the size of the pretesting effect was also found to increase in the presence of additional, interfering material, regardless of whether a low (Experiment 2a) or high (Experiment 2b) degree of learning was induced for the interfering material. Pretesting could thus play a significant role in educational settings where information often needs to be retained over prolonged periods of time or in the presence of competing information.
Keywords: testing effect, pretesting effect, retention interval, interference